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Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Fri Nov 17, 2023 12:11 am
by jpdalton
Magna Owner’s Club ID Card
It’s 1965, and you just bought yourself a brand new Mark VII or Sawsmith RAS. Congratulations! So what now…?!
Join the
MAGNA OWNER’S CLUB, of course!
Maybe this is what they called a Facebook group back in the Johnson Administration??
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Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2023 4:49 pm
by DOWeaver
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2023 12:52 pm
by chapmanruss
Dale,
Some nice examples of old printed materials. Some I have others I do not. I am not sure if I have a printed copy (do have a PDF) of the Special Miter Gauge instructions, but I do have at least one of the Special Miter Gauge for my Model 10's. Fun to see some of the old advertising.
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2023 6:26 am
by jpdalton
DOWeaver wrote: ↑Wed Nov 22, 2023 4:49 pm
I wanted to show some of my advertisement
Dale - thanks for sharing, and contributing to the thread!
Do you have a picture you could share of the
back of the Special Miter Gauge sheet? I haven’t seen that version, and I’m curious if that came from
Magna American Corporation, or
Shopsmith, Inc.?
Also, if you haven’t seen the source of your “letter from the president”, it came from the packet shipped with the 10-ER speed selector dial:
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Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2023 10:59 am
by DOWeaver
I would say ss from 1976
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I do not know for sure but bulletin 513110- 1/76 ? I could be wrong
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2023 5:52 pm
by jpdalton
DOWeaver wrote: ↑Sun Nov 26, 2023 10:59 am
I would say ss from 1976
I would agree! There was a period after Shopsmith, Inc resurrected the brand in 1972 that they were still actively supporting the old Model 10-E/ER machines with items like this. I think the timeline for end of support was about the time they ran out of most parts necessary to continue support of that older platform!
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Wed Dec 13, 2023 2:33 pm
by jpdalton
Putting a Face to the Name: The Other Magna Authors
A lot of us are familiar with the 10-part Woodworking Course that was first created in 1956, and helped users adopt the revolutionary Mark 5.
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We may also be familiar with the fact that it was penned by a San Jose State College Industrial Arts professor named Benjamin Spaulding. Did you ever wonder what Professor Spaulding looked like??
Well, thanks to the research of Facebook contributor, Stephen Draper, we have this page from the college’s 1941 yearbook:
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I zoomed in a little more closely, and noticed an adjacent picture of his department head, Dr. Heber Sotzin.
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Then I remembered having seen his name before as well:
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This is a rarely seen booklet from the Model 10-ER days, promoting the use of the Shopsmith for Industrial Arts education. The early Magna team clearly had a great deal of respect for the Industrial Arts program at San Jose State, and the people who ran it!
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Fri Dec 15, 2023 12:17 am
by JPG
Or perhaps a matter of geography?
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Fri Dec 15, 2023 11:15 am
by SteveMaryland
Imagine a college/university today having an industrial arts department. Headed by a PhD no less. Or an engineering graphics (drafting) department.
And "Librarianship"! Even Ivy League schools had such departments.
All deemed important subjects years ago, but now discarded by modern Western academia. What could go wrong?
Re: Share your Magna memorabilia!
Posted: Fri Dec 15, 2023 11:28 am
by JPG
At least it WILL eliminate book burning!
Anyone else recall the 'library' in "the time machine".